Amazon Planning New P2P Payments and Kindle Point of Sale Systems

The company is looking to hire help for a new P2P payments system to go head-to-head with PayPal, and is accelerating a Kindle point of sale project.

E-commerce giant Amazon is taking steps to gain a bigger foothold in the payments space by offering P2P payments and a Kindle-based mobile point of sale system for retail merchants.

TechCrunch noticed an ad that Amazon posted for senior technical program managers to help it get a new P2P payments service off the ground. The new service would presumably put Amazon in direct competition with PayPal, as well as banks that offer their own P2P payments services.

Meanwhile Amazon is also looking to take on Square and other mobile point of sale providers. The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that Amazon is going to offer a Kindle-based point of sale checkout system for brick-and-mortar stores. The online retailer would provide the tablets to merchants with card readers, possibly with additional services such as website development or data analysis, the Journal said.

Amazon is accelerating the program by acquiring technology and hiring engineers from GoPago, a mobile checkout startup.

To attract merchants, Amazon may offer to post promotions or discounts for the merchants through Amazon’s website or its Amazon Local daily deals program, the Journal’s sources said.

Amazon made some waves early last year when it filed for a patent on a mobile wallet. Clearly the company sees an opportunity to be a disruptor in the payments world, and, as the Journal noted, it already has the card information of more than 230 million users. The online retailer certainly has the will and the means to shake things up in an already fast-changing payments landscape.

Jonathan Camhi has been an associate editor with Bank Systems & Technology since 2012. He previously worked as a freelance journalist in New York City covering politics, health and immigration, and has a master's degree from the City University of New York's Graduate School ... View Full Bio

Wow, I really do hope Amazon shakes up the scene. I've always liked the design of their products although they rarely took off in the public. If they can integrate some of these features better or faster than Google can take off with them Amazon may really turn some heads in the mobile tech space.